Your idea seems attractive but there's some problems that would make it not effective for overtaking.LegendaryM wrote:I think the FIA should enforce a downforce limit, not by say 15,000N max downforce as teams will try to have 15,000N of downforce at low speeds, but limit it by lift coefficent. This would ensure teams worked towards reducing drag which over time would improve the wake of the car.
All the other ideas, except for spec aero (if that happened i would stop watching f1) would increase overtaking for the first few races, but it would become increasingly more difficult to overtake as teams clawed back downforce. A downforce limit would ensure that the wake should continually improve as drag reduces, so overtaking continues to become easier
In the case drag reduction would effectively lead to laminar flow behind the car (my second point is already half bring) you would then have a big problem: Slipstream would decrease, thus the following car would less and less benefit from reduced drag.
The second thing is that drag reduction on a car doesn't mean laminar flow past it.
A diffuser is a tool for reducing drag yet it creates turbulence.
The reasons are twofold:
-you can't have a pure laminar flow behind a car (or a plane) for the car even being airfoil shaped would still force the flows (separated in upper or lower parts) to turn at its most aft point to rejoin again.
This will lead to separation all the way out.
This is especially true since what is important for the following car is the turbulence at ground level and that very ground + the wheels of the following car will lead to turbulence anyway.
-The car not being symmetrical you'll have pressure gradient aft of car, and those pressure gradient will develop into wakes.
It is true that not paying attention to drag can be a problem, but you'd be surprised to know that F1 cars except for their rear wings, are very low drag as far as their bodies are concerned and that most of the wake problems come not from drag wake but from downforce creation related flows.